Paul R. Pillar is nonresident senior fellow at the Center for Security Studies of Georgetown University. He served in several senior positions with the CIA and the National Intelligence Council and is a retired army reserve officer. He is the author of Intelligence and U.S. Foreign Policy: Iraq, 9/11, and Misguided Reform; Terrorism and U.S. Foreign Policy; and Negotiating Peace: War Termination as a Bargaining Process.
This book should be required reading for all presidential candidates.--Gordon S. Brown Foreign Service Journal A formidable and influential scholar offers a fresh and distinctive take on the idea that U.S. foreign policy is ultimately an expression of 'us' rather than 'them.'--Andrew Bacevich, Boston University Recommended for the general reader who has an interest in international relations, particularly in regard to how the United States may, in fact, be perceived by other countries.--Library Journal Fine and courageous book.--New York Times Book Review Pillar's is one of the best books on this important subject I have ever read.--Chronicles Paul R. Pillar raises interesting and important questions about the preconceptions drawn from America's own national experience.... Every country has such preconceptions, but Pillar argues, most persuasively, that America's are particularly potent.--Survival A well-thought-out examination of the United States' distinct history and its psychological, policy-shaping consequences.--Arab Weekly Richly persuasive and powerfully written.... Why America Misunderstands the World is a work that should be an essential, basic read for any interested observer of American foreign policy.--CHOICE Paul R. Pillar is one of the few people who have the government experience and the scholarly accomplishments to be able to analyze how and why the United States so often builds its policies on badly flawed views of the world--and of itself. He shows that America is indeed exceptional, although not in the way that political leaders would have it.--Robert Jervis, author of Why Intelligence Fails: Lessons from the Iranian Revolution and the Iraq War Why America Misunderstands the World confirms Pillar's status as one of the smartest and sanest writers on U.S. foreign policy. His forceful yet fair-minded analysis explains how good fortune made America very powerful but also left Americans ill-equipped to understand how politics work outside their borders. The result? Repeated foreign policy failures and a remarkable inability to learn from them. This book should be required reading for students seeking a career in the foreign policy establishment, and especially those who hope to occupy the Oval Office.--Stephen Walt, Harvard Kennedy School